The video, shot Tuesday by a woman named Lexi, shows him arguing with her along with three of her friends and a bystander after the women said the employee called them “porn stars” and asked them if they were putting feminine hygiene products in each other.

The women said it started when two of them went to the bathroom together to exchange feminine products while on their way to Ogden for the Twilight Concert.

“Right when we got inside, somebody started shaking on the door and was like, 'Only one at a time.' And it was kind of violent,” recounted Camille Hoerner.

Hoerner said the person didn’t say who they were, and they were gone when the girls opened the door. She said they thought someone tried to break into the bathroom and they felt unsafe.

When the other women had to go to the bathroom, they went in a group of three.

“Safety in numbers,” Lexi said. “We're in a public area.”

After the women returned to their seats, the UTA employee paid them a visit and that’s when they say he began to make inappropriate comments.

“'This isn't Pornhub, this is public transit,'” Alyssa Childs said, explaining what the worker told them. “[He] just proceeded to call us porn stars... again and again and again.”

The employee left and Christy Atkinson, who saw the first confrontation, she could hear from her seat that the girls were upset.

“I'm like, ‘I'm a mom. I’ve got to step in,’” she said. “I need to step in and do this for these girls.”

Atkinson said she went and found the employee. “I said, ‘I just want to let you know I’m writing a complaint on you for the girls that you just called Pornhub stars,’” she said.

After Atkinson returned, that’s when they say the employee again came up to their seats. This time, Lexi pulled out her phone to record the interaction from there.

“You came up here and called us porn stars,” Childs says in the video, to the employee. Atkinson echoes, “You have no right to say that they are porn stars.”

Lexi and Childs tell the employee he shook the bathroom door and tried to push it in.

The employee later says that he got complaints about the women from other passengers.

“You have no idea what we catch people in these bathrooms doing,” he says. Childs follows with, “Okay, other people doing their [expletive] doesn't mean that's what we were doing.”

Atkinson said after calling the women names, the employee walked away and they stayed on the train until they got to Ogden.

“You cannot say that to passengers, it's not okay,” she said.

“That was so unprofessional, and uncomfortable and degrading,” Childs said.

Carl Arky, spokesperson for UTA said they’ve seen the video, after Atkinson shared it on social media. He said they immediately acted. The employee is now on administrative leave, and he said they’ve started an investigation.

“We’re sorry that it ever happened,” Arky said. “These are not the kind of encounters we ever want to see happen on our trains, or our buses, or any of our vehicles.”

Arky said there are regulations and policies when it comes to bathrooms on the trains. He said they’ll interview the employee to hear his side of the story, as they work to figure out all the details of what transpired.

At the end of the day, he said, they want to treat all their customers with courtesy and respect. He said the situation got out of hand, and indicated that they’d be talking with all their employees in light of the incident.

Arky said UTA has reached out to one of the families of the women involved, to speak with them.

“We've talked to some UTA representatives and they've been incredibly nice and apologetic to us,” Hoerner said, adding, “but still, we'd like to see action out of this because how he treated us, and how he responded to us was not okay.”